Salmon - The
governor says pleas to Congress and the administration disaster help
are getting no response
NEWPORT -- Gov. Ted Kulongoski
appealed to President Bush Friday, asking for a major disaster to be
declared along the Oregon Coast due to a partial shutdown of the
commercial salmon fishing season.
The governor's request is one of many
coming from his office and Oregon's Congressional delegation in recent
months, seeking money to pay fishermen. All so far have gone
unanswered.
In a town hall meeting here,
Kulongoski asked an audience of about 100 local politicians and
fishermen how long the commercial trollers might need help.
"I need to know whether this is going
to be a long-term strategy," he said.
The answer: Poor returns to the
Klamath River stock of fall Chinook salmon could continue through
2008, meaning long-term financial aid may be needed to keep the
fishing fleet alive. Kulongoski said he would factor any future needs
into the state budget for 2007 and 2008. Meanwhile, the governor faces
a stiff fight in the November election.
Trollers from central California to
northern Oregon are being forced to drastically reduce their catch
along a 700-mile stretch of coast so that fishery managers can protect
dwindling runs of Klamath River salmon. Because Klamath River salmon
can be found in the ocean north and south of the mouth of the river in
Northern California, fishery experts have reduced all fishing to
minimize the catch of Klamath salmon.
Three bills have been introduced in
Congress asking for more than $80 million to pay fishermen for their
losses. None have yet had any success. Similar appeals for a
declaration of a commercial fishing failure to U.S. Secretary of
Commerce Carlos M. Gutierrez have not been answered. Kulongoski's plea
to President Bush on Friday was sent in a letter through the Federal
Emergency Management Agency.
Kulongoski told his audience Friday
that he would support asking the state's Legislative Emergency Board
for $2 million to begin assisting fishermen. The board meets later
this month in Salem.
How much help Oregon's commercial
salmon fleet needs is a matter of debate. As part of Congressional
legislation, the governor's office has identified $20 million in needs
but in Kulongoski's letter to President Bush Friday, he identified
$32.2 million in losses.
Independent and federal economists
interviewed by The Oregonian have come up with a much lower figure --
less than $12 million.
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Even as the governor met with
officials in Newport's city hall, salmon fishermen along the
waterfront were preparing their boats for the start of the commercial
trolling season. While the recreational fishing season is continuing
largely intact, the commercial fishermen will get to fish just 16 days
in June, along with a smattering of days in July and August.
Traditionally, the commercial season extends from March 15 to Oct. 31.
Jeff Reeves, a former commercial
fisherman from Charleston, on the southern Oregon coast, told the
governor that despite Kulongoski's efforts and those of other
politicians, he and his family were still in great jeopardy.
"We've gotten nothing so far as of
today," Reeves said, calling most state programs a "baby bandage."
Reeves said his 23-year-old son would
be heading north to Newport on Saturday to fish in approved waters for
salmon. His son, he said, fishes alone and is facing rough weather in
the narrow window of time during which he is allowed to haul in
chinook salmon.
"I'm very worried about him," he
said. "I'm going to have a knot in my stomach bigger than normal."
Kulongoski echoed many fishermen who
believe the commercial fishing industry could fail if the problems on
the Klamath River are not resolved. The problems on the river include
four dams that do not allow any fish passage and upstream withdrawals
of water for irrigation that leave low water flows, which in turn help
breed disease in warm stagnant waters in the lower river.
Solutions to those problems will take
years if not decades to remedy, experts agree. In the interim, members
of the commercial fishing fleet are hoping a healthy catch this summer
combined with high prices for their salmon will nurse them through
another year.
Paul Heikkila, a Coos County
fishermen and former extension agent for Oregon State University, told
the governor his grandfather had first commercially fished out of
Astoria in 1906. This year, Heikkila said, he wants that tradition to
continue.
"If I don't catch a salmon this year,
it will be the first time in my family in 100 years," he said.
Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541) 883-6100
FAX (541) 883-8893 kwua@cvcwireless.net